By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
Health Works CollectiveHealth Works CollectiveHealth Works Collective
  • Health
    • Mental Health
    Health
    Healthcare organizations are operating on slimmer profit margins than ever. One report in August showed that they are even lower than the beginning of the…
    Show More
    Top News
    benefits of using protein powder to build muscles
    Protein Powder for Muscle Mass: Everything You Need to Know
    December 12, 2021
    changes brought on by blockchain in healthcare
    Technology In The Healthcare Industry
    March 28, 2022
    What Does Core Body Temperature Say About Health?
    August 17, 2022
    Latest News
    Grounded Healing: A Natural Ally for Sustainable Healthcare Systems
    May 16, 2025
    Learn how to Renew your Medical Card in West Virginia
    May 16, 2025
    Choosing the Right Supplement Manufacturer for Your Brand
    May 1, 2025
    Engineering Temporary Hospitals for Extreme Weather
    April 24, 2025
  • Policy and Law
    • Global Healthcare
    • Medical Ethics
    Policy and Law
    Get the latest updates about Insurance policies and Laws in the Healthcare industry for different geographical locations.
    Show More
    Top News
    FDA Approves Diabetes Pill
    May 2, 2011
    Patient Gets Drunk on Hand Sanitizer
    June 20, 2011
    Cultivating Health Improvement
    July 20, 2011
    Latest News
    Building Smarter Care Teams: Aligning Roles, Structure, and Clinical Expertise
    May 18, 2025
    The Critical Role of Healthcare in Personal Injury Recovery: A Comprehensive Guide for Victims
    May 14, 2025
    The Backbone of Successful Trials: Clinical Data Management
    April 28, 2025
    Advancing Your Healthcare Career through Education and Specialization
    April 16, 2025
  • Medical Innovations
  • News
  • Wellness
  • Tech
Search
© 2023 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Reading: Chart Review: A New Carnival for Academic Medicine Blogs
Share
Notification Show More
Font ResizerAa
Health Works CollectiveHealth Works Collective
Font ResizerAa
Search
Follow US
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
© 2023 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
Health Works Collective > Policy & Law > Medical Education > Chart Review: A New Carnival for Academic Medicine Blogs
Medical Education

Chart Review: A New Carnival for Academic Medicine Blogs

Wing of Zock
Last updated: December 3, 2012 9:30 am
Wing of Zock
Share
10 Min Read
SHARE

Welcome to the inaugural edition of Chart Review, our new monthly feature where the editors at Wing of Zock highlight our favorite blog posts from the previous month. We focus on blogs about academic medicine, whether from the perspective of student, resident, faculty member, dean, or hospital CEO. Medical schools and teaching hospitals provide fertile ground for innovative responses to health care challenges. We are pleased to highlight some of the best here, and hope you will send us your favorites as well.

Welcome to the inaugural edition of Chart Review, our new monthly feature where the editors at Wing of Zock highlight our favorite blog posts from the previous month. We focus on blogs about academic medicine, whether from the perspective of student, resident, faculty member, dean, or hospital CEO. Medical schools and teaching hospitals provide fertile ground for innovative responses to health care challenges. We are pleased to highlight some of the best here, and hope you will send us your favorites as well.

Baltimore to Beijing: Adventures in Global Health Care, Johns Hopkins Medicine

In his two-part post on Johns Hopkins Medicine’s International Partners Forum, Steve Thompson reports on the energy created in Baltimore as leaders, managers, care providers, researchers, and others came together to talk about improving health care. In Part 2 of the post, Thompson writes of forum participants sharing practices on patient-centered care, improved quality, and the dual-edged sword that is technology. We appreciated this post in particular for its concrete examples and multitude of links.

More Read

Montefiore Medical Center Study Shows Strength of Simulation Training
Doctors: It’s No Longer About You
What We Have to Be Thankful For
How That New Drug Goes From Idea to Market
Physician Wellness: Why It’s Such a Struggle

Scope: Stanford University

Lia Steakley’s November 20 post examines whether music therapy can benefit surgery patients. She reports on a University of Kentucky study:

“In examining the use of music before, during and after surgery, researchers found that listening to tunes during all three stages proved beneficial. Overall, patients who listened to music were less anxious, required less sedative medication, recovered more quickly and reported better satisfaction with their medical experience.”

Steakley consults other sources to conclude, “While some studies show that listening to classical music could yield the most positive results, the latest findings underscore the importance of taking into account patients’ musical tastes.” Patient-centered care strikes again, we say.

Vector: Boston Children’s Hospital

Crowd-sourcing is one of the most promising uses of connected computing and social networking: putting many minds to work on a single problem. In a post published November 8, Nancy Fliesler reports on The CLARITY Challenge, Boston Children’s inaugural attempt at crowd-sourcing. The single problem? Interpreting the genomes of families with unexplained genetic diseases, and investigating how to apply those findings to patient care. Twenty-three teams from 10 countries participated in the project, which sought genetic mutations that could be causing the diseases. The winning team hails from a teaching hospital, Brigham and Women’s in Boston.

“Genomic medicine—and patients everywhere—are also CLARITY winners. The challenge has accelerated the development of ‘best practices’ for genomic interpretation and return of results, which will be distilled in a scholarly paper to guide practitioners around the world,” Fliesler writes.

Academic Life in Emergency Medicine

This blog’s stated purpose is to give readers a behind-the-scenes look into the world of emergency medicine through the eyes of a team of bloggers, led by Michelle Lin, MD, associate professor of emergency medicine at the University of California San Francisco. In her November 16 post, Nikita Joshi, MD, an emergency medicine resident at SUNY Downstate, asks, “What is debriefing in simulation education?”

“Ultimately the goal of debriefing is to engage in a conversation where learning happens. It is an open format for discussion of the events that occurred, how we felt about it, and understanding the thought processes. It allows for identifying areas where perhaps knowledge or skill was missing so that it can be corrected in the future. So maybe debriefing is a little touchy-feely, but what’s wrong with a little human contact?!” she writes.

Other things we like about this blog: the collaborative shared responsibility for posting, the weekly post that consists of “Tweet pearls,” and the organized schedule that features different kinds of posts on different days.

33 Charts

The Association of American Medical Colleges’ (AAMC) Annual Meeting took place from November 2-6 in San Francisco and featured many fascinating keynote speakers who explored various aspects of innovation.

Among those speakers was Sal Kahn, founder of the Kahn Academy, whose keynote made waves in the Annual Meeting’s Twitter feed. What if academic medicine used the Kahn Academy method, better leveraging interactive learning, letting students take more control of their knowledge?

Bryan Vartabedian, MD, posed the question in a recent post, “If Sal Khan were medical faculty member, would he get tenure?” His guess at the outset is no, largely due to the bureaucratic red tape that exists in many academic medical centers—getting past an advancement committee.

Vartabedian writes, “The thousands of professional medical educators who witnessed Khan this weekend were blown away. It was the right message at the right time.”

Aspiring Docs Diaries

This AAMC-powered blog is new to the #hcsm community and chronicles the lessons learned in and outside of the classroom from the point of view of Devon Taylor, a first-year student at Harvard Medical School.

There is little doubt that learning in medical school goes beyond simply memorizing a set curriculum and regurgitating information. In the most recent post, Taylor writes about how “learning takes on an entirely new personality and philosophy.”

We like how this blog is frequently updated, the passionate and thought-provoking posts, and the blog’s conversational, open-minded nature.

Dean Katz’s Blog

Paul Katz, Dean of Cooper Medical School at Rowan University, blogged live from the 2012 AAMC Annual Meeting, chronicling the various keynote and plenary speakers, Innovation Arc sessions, and breakout sessions taking place over the full five days of the conference. Highlights include summaries and discussion of sessions such as “What Faculty Should Know About Social Media,” a mini workshop on expanding the role of social media. The panelists were three docs active on social media (and who often pop up our Twitter feed (@MedPedsDoctor @Kind4Kids @RyanMadanickMD) who cited academic research and anecdotal evidence in their social media journeys to gain a solid base of followers and how to best utilize Twitter chats.

Other things we liked from Dean Katz’s live blog: Brief summary of Eric Topol, MD’s, innovation keynote on the challenge of managing the information explosion in the medical field, managing personalized medicine, and how to leverage game-changing technology. Also, virtual tours of innovative uses of building space in multipurpose settings: Institutions such as Georgetown, University of Central Florida, Arizona, Ohio State, University of Nevada, and Michigan provided “fascinating virtual tours of simulation labs, libraries, educational spaces, gross anatomy labs … highly creative,” Katz wrote.

Kevin MD

Anthony Brenneman, PA-C, SW, is president of the Physician Assistant Education Association and a Clinical Associate Professor at the University of Iowa Carver College of Medicine. Brenneman had a post on Kevin MD on the projected physician shortage and how all health professions must work together in order to increase quality of education and interest in primary care.

“Rather than jockey for hierarchy within the medical team, we should focus on the concerns we share, particularly insufficient numbers of educators and clinical training sites to teach and guide the next generation of health care professionals,” Brenneman said. “If we want to have a 21st century, patient-centered health care system where health professionals work as a coordinated team, we need to first reevaluate how everyone on the team is trained and educated before they work together as graduates. While each profession has its respective licenses and certification, and our roles and responsibilities to the patient can vary, we hang our hat under the same medical principles and ethics.”

We hope you’ve enjoyed this inaugural edition of Chart Review. As you’re trolling cyberspace and come across blog posts that intrigue or infuriate you—or at least make you think—we hope you’ll send them our way for our next edition. Send your nominations to Managing Editor Jennifer Salopek at jsalopek@aamc.org.
TAGGED:Chart Review
Share This Article
Facebook Copy Link Print
Share

Stay Connected

1.5kFollowersLike
4.5kFollowersFollow
2.8kFollowersPin
136kSubscribersSubscribe

Latest News

Do You Grind Your Teeth at Night? Here’s How Night Guards and TMJ Treatments Can Help
Do You Grind Your Teeth at Night? Here’s How Night Guards and TMJ Treatments Can Help
Dental health
May 21, 2025
The Secret To A Confident Smile: Top Tips For Better Teeth
The Secret To A Confident Smile: Top Tips For Better Teeth
Dental health
May 21, 2025
Clinical Expertise
Building Smarter Care Teams: Aligning Roles, Structure, and Clinical Expertise
Health care
May 18, 2025
Grounded Healing: A Natural Ally for Sustainable Healthcare Systems
Grounded Healing: A Natural Ally for Sustainable Healthcare Systems
Health
May 15, 2025

You Might also Like

Mastering During Difficult Situations with Patients

December 12, 2013
Online Smarts for Doctors
BusinessMedical EducationSocial Media

You saw that? Social Media Smarts for Physicians

March 14, 2016
ListenLogic Health Patient Journey
eHealthMedical DevicesMedical EducationSocial MediaTechnologyWellness

Using Advanced Social Intelligence to Understand the Patient Journey

March 30, 2015
Biotech is Game Changer in Cancer Treatment Advances
eHealthHealth careHealth ReformMedical EducationMedical InnovationsPublic HealthWellness

The Revolutionary Advent Of Precision Medicine In Cancer Treatment

February 23, 2019
Subscribe
Subscribe to our newsletter to get our newest articles instantly!
Follow US
© 2008-2025 HealthWorks Collective. All Rights Reserved.
  • About
  • Contact
  • Privacy
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?